When a titan of centralized exchanges fully exits a major market, regulators expect an orderly flow into supervised platforms. The European Unionu2019s Markets in Crypto-Assets framework was designed precisely for this u2014 to channel crypto activity into licensed, compliant venues. The actual data from Binanceu2019s EU shutdown suggests reality runs hard in the opposite direction.
According to a report citing Binance CEO Richard Teng , approximately 70% of the funds that EU users withdrew after the exchange suspended services moved into self-custodied wallets. Only 30% ended up on MiCA-compliant platforms. For a regulatory regime built on the premise that licensing leads to consumer protection, that number is a quiet indictment of how detached the official playbook is from user behavior.
The 70% That Went Outside the Tent
Teng did not mince words. He argued directly that the migration toward self-hosted wallets raises questions about whether MiCA is achieving its intended consumer protection goals. Self-custodied wallets operate entirely outside the oversight applied to licensed exchanges u2014 there is no KYC, no transaction monitoring, no mandatory capital buffers, and no redress mechanism if a user loses a key or gets phished.
The argument is not new. Crypto purists have long maintained that self-custody is the only true use of blockchain. But MiCAu2019s architects assumed that once the big exchanges were regulated, users would prefer the safety of licensed operators. The 70% figure punctures that assumption. It suggests that a significant portion of Binanceu2019s EU user base actively chose to detach from the regulated system rather than migrate within it.
A Fragmented Continent and a Pivot East
Not all EU jurisdictions see things the same way. Teng noted that several member states have invited Binance to apply for local licenses, hinting at the fractured regulatory landscape underneath the MiCA umbrella. While MiCA provides a single rulebook, national regulators retain some gatekeeping power, and the speed of implementation varies wildly. That fragmentation may explain why a user in one country faces a smooth registration path while another simply pulls funds


